321 research outputs found

    Plantenparasitaire nematoden en golfvelden

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    Over schimmels en insecten, als belagers van grassen en golfvelden, is relatief veel bekend. Minder bekend zijn nematoden ofwel aaltjes. Vanuit met name Ierland en het Verenigd Koninkrijk, golflanden bij uitstek, worden de laatste jaren regelmatig problemen gemeld met slecht groeiend gras op golfbanen veroorzaakt door nematoden. Vooral de greens laten veel schade zien

    Crossover Scaling Functions in One Dimensional Dynamic Growth Models

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    The crossover from Edwards-Wilkinson (s=0s=0) to KPZ (s>0s>0) type growth is studied for the BCSOS model. We calculate the exact numerical values for the k=0k=0 and 2π/N2\pi/N massgap for N18N\leq 18 using the master equation. We predict the structure of the crossover scaling function and confirm numerically that m04(π/N)2[1+3u2(s)N/(2π2)]0.5m_0\simeq 4 (\pi/N)^2 [1+3u^2(s) N/(2\pi^2)]^{0.5} and m12(π/N)2[1+u2(s)N/π2]0.5m_1\simeq 2 (\pi/N)^2 [1+ u^2(s) N/\pi^2]^{0.5}, with u(1)=1.03596967u(1)=1.03596967. KPZ type growth is equivalent to a phase transition in meso-scopic metallic rings where attractive interactions destroy the persistent current; and to endpoints of facet-ridges in equilibrium crystal shapes.Comment: 11 pages, TeX, figures upon reques

    Line tensions, correlation lengths, and critical exponents in lipid membranes near critical points

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    Membranes containing a wide variety of ternary mixtures of high chain-melting temperature lipids, low chain-melting temperature lipids, and cholesterol undergo lateral phase separartion into coexisting liquid phases at a miscibility transition. When membranes are prepared from a ternary lipid mixture at a critical composition, they pass through a miscibility critical point at the transition temperature. Since the critical temperature is typically on the order of room temperature, membranes provide an unusual opportunity in which to perform a quantitative study of biophysical systems that exhibit critical phenomena in the two-dimensional Ising universality class. As a critical point is approached from either high or low temperature, the scale of fluctuations in lipid composition, set by the correlation length, diverges. In addition, as a critical point is approached from low temperature, the line tension between coexisting phases decreases to zero. Here we quantitatively evaluate the temperature dependence of line tension between liquid domains and of fluctuation correlation lengths in lipid membranes in order to extract a critical exponent, nu. We obtain nu=1.2 plus or minus 0.2, consistent with the Ising model prediction nu=1. We also evaluate the probability distributions of pixel intensities in fluoresence images of membranes. From the temperature dependence of these distributions above the critical temperature, we extract an independent critical exponent beta=0.124 plus or minus 0.03 which is consistent with the Ising prediction of beta=1/8.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figure

    Crossover from Isotropic to Directed Percolation

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    Directed percolation is one of the generic universality classes for dynamic processes. We study the crossover from isotropic to directed percolation by representing the combined problem as a random cluster model, with a parameter rr controlling the spontaneous birth of new forest fires. We obtain the exact crossover exponent yDP=yT1y_{DP}=y_T-1 at r=1r=1 using Coulomb gas methods in 2D. Isotropic percolation is stable, as is confirmed by numerical finite-size scaling results. For D3D \geq 3, the stability seems to change. An intuitive argument, however, suggests that directed percolation at r=0r=0 is unstable and that the scaling properties of forest fires at intermediate values of rr are in the same universality class as isotropic percolation, not only in 2D, but in all dimensions.Comment: 4 pages, REVTeX, 4 epsf-emedded postscript figure

    Anomalous Roughness in Dimer-Type Surface Growth

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    We point out how geometric features affect the scaling properties of non-equilibrium dynamic processes, by a model for surface growth where particles can deposit and evaporate only in dimer form, but dissociate on the surface. Pinning valleys (hill tops) develop spontaneously and the surface facets for all growth (evaporation) biases. More intriguingly, the scaling properties of the rough one dimensional equilibrium surface are anomalous. Its width, WLαW\sim L^\alpha, diverges with system size LL, as α=1/3\alpha={1/3} instead of the conventional universal value α=1/2\alpha={1/2}. This originates from a topological non-local evenness constraint on the surface configurations.Comment: Published version in PR

    An exact universal amplitude ratio for percolation

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    The universal amplitude ratio R~ξ\tilde{R}_{\xi} for percolation in two dimensions is determined exactly using results for the dilute A model in regime 1, by way of a relationship with the q-state Potts model for q<4.Comment: 5 pages, LaTeX, submitted to J. Phys. A. One paragraph rewritten to correct error

    Dynamical correlations and quantum phase transition in the quantum Potts model

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    We present a detailed study of the finite temperature dynamical properties of the quantum Potts model in one dimension.Quasiparticle excitations in this model have internal quantum numbers, and their scattering matrix {\gf deep} in the gapped phases is shown to take a simple {\gf exchange} form in the perturbative regimes. The finite temperature correlation functions in the quantum critical regime are determined using conformal invariance, while {\gf far from the quantum critical point} we compute the decay functions analytically within a semiclassical approach of Sachdev and Damle [K. Damle and S. Sachdev, Phys. Rev. B \textbf{57}, 8307 (1998)]. As a consequence, decay functions exhibit a {\em diffusive character}. {\gf We also provide robust arguments that our semiclassical analysis carries over to very low temperatures even in the vicinity of the quantum phase transition.} Our results are also relevant for quantum rotor models, antiferromagnetic chains, and some spin ladder systems.Comment: 18 PRB pages added correction

    Temperature Dependence of Facet Ridges in Crystal Surfaces

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    The equilibrium crystal shape of a body-centered solid-on-solid (BCSOS) model on a honeycomb lattice is studied numerically. We focus on the facet ridge endpoints (FRE). These points are equivalent to one dimensional KPZ-type growth in the exactly soluble square lattice BCSOS model. In our more general context the transfer matrix is not stochastic at the FRE points, and a more complex structure develops. We observe ridge lines sticking into the rough phase where thesurface orientation jumps inside the rounded part of the crystal. Moreover, the rough-to-faceted edges become first-order with a jump in surface orientation, between the FRE point and Pokrovsky-Talapov (PT) type critical endpoints. The latter display anisotropic scaling with exponent z=3z=3 instead of familiar PT value z=2z=2.Comment: 12 pages, 19 figure

    Surface Incommensurate Structure in an Anisotropic Model with competing interactions on Semiinfinite Triangular Lattice

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    An anisotropic spin model on a triangular semiinfinite lattice with ferromagnetic nearest-neighbour interactions and one antiferromagnetic next-nearest-neighbour interaction is investigated by the cluster transfer-matrix method. A phase diagram with antiphase, ferromagnetic, incommensurate, and disordered phase is obtained. The bulk uniaxial incommensurate structure modulated in the direction of the competing interactions is found between the antiphase and the disordered phase. The incommensurate structure near the surface with free and boundary condition is studied at different temperatures. Paramagnetic damping at the surface and enhancement of the incommensurate structure in the subsurface region at high temperatures and a new subsurface incommensurate structure modulated in two directions at low temperatures are found.Comment: 13 pages, plainTex, 11 figures, paper submitted to J. Phys.
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